Abstract

The filamentous cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme differentiates from vegetative cells into three distinct cell types, heterocysts, hormogonia, and akinetes, in response to different stimuli. Cultures growing with ammonium can be induced to form hormogonia or heterocysts upon removal of the combined nitrogen. A DNA microarray consisting of 94% of the open reading frames predicted from the 9.059-Mb N. punctiforme genome was used to generate a global transcription data set consisting of seven time points over a 24-h period of nitrogen deprivation, which results in heterocyst formation. This data set was compared to a similarly generated data set of nitrogen-starved N. punctiforme resulting in hormogonium formation that had previously been published (E. L. Campbell, H. Christman, and J. C. Meeks, J. Bacteriol. 190:7382-7391, 2008). The transition from vegetative cells to either heterocysts or hormogonia resulted in rapid and sustained expression of genes required for utilization of alternate nitrogen sources. Overall, 1,036 and 1,762 genes were found to be differentially transcribed during the heterocyst and hormogonium time courses, respectively, as analyzed with the Bayesian user-friendly software for analyzing time series microarray experiments (BATS). Successive transcription of heterocyst regulatory, structural, and functional genes occurred over the 24 h required to form a functional heterocyst. During hormogonium differentiation, some heterocyst structural and functional genes were upregulated, while the heterocyst master regulator hetR was downregulated. There are commonalities in differential expression between cells bound for differentiation into heterocysts or hormogonia, yet the two paths are distinguished by their developmentally specific transcription profiles.

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